Cui Hao's Poems of Yellow Crane Tower in Tang Dynasty

Yellow Crane Tower

Author Cui Hao? the Tang Dynasty

The fairy of the past has flown away by the yellow crane, leaving only an empty Yellow Crane Tower.

The yellow crane never revisited earth, there have been no long white clouds for thousands of years.

Every tree in Hanyang has become clear due to sunlight, and Nautilus Island is covered with sweet grass.

But I looked home, and the twilight was getting thicker. The river is shrouded in mist, which brings people deep melancholy.

The immortal of the past has flown away with the Yellow Crane, leaving only an empty Yellow Crane Tower here. The yellow crane never came back. For thousands of years, it only saw long white clouds.

Hanyang trees are clearly visible in the sun, and Nautilus Island is covered with green grass. It is getting late. Looking into the distance, where is my hometown? In front of me, I saw a mist hanging over the river, which brought people deep sorrow.

Content reading:

This poem is a masterpiece of nostalgia. The poet boarded the historical site Yellow Crane Tower and got a panoramic view of the scenery before him. His poems are full of emotion, blurted out and beyond words. It is both natural and magnificent, full of personality. Poetry is not harmonious, but the syllables are clear and not awkward. It's really one step at a time, and it has become a treasure admired by all previous dynasties.

The Yellow Crane Tower is a seven-character poem written by Cui Hao, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the beautiful scenery overlooking the Yellow Crane Tower and is a masterpiece of nostalgia.

The first section of this poem skillfully uses allusions to lead immortals to the Yellow Crane Tower by crane. Zhuan Xu closely followed the first couplet, saying that the Yellow Crane Tower has gone through thousands of years since the immortal left; With the poetic turn of the neckline, I entered the description of the scenery and wrote down what I saw in the Yellow Crane Tower on a sunny day. The end of the couplet is to write about the feeling of returning home at sunset along the Yanbo River, which makes the poem return to the intangible realm at the beginning.